Standard
Chartered may see white knight takeover on painful
recovery: CLSA
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[December 18, 2015]
By Elzio Barreto
HONG KONG (Reuters) - UK bank Standard
Chartered (StanChart) could be acquired by a white knight as its
recovery could prove to be "challenging", according to broker CLSA,
which upgraded shares of the Asia-focused lender on that possibility.
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Singapore's biggest lender DBS Group would be the most likely buyer,
added CLSA in a note to clients dated Dec. 17. StanChart has seen
its shares fall below a forward price-to-book value of 0.5 times
this week, making it an appealing target.
The lender, which is in the middle of a restructuring under new CEO
Bill Winters, has announced a series of moves to restore its
profitability, including axing 15,000 jobs and streamlining the
bank's management structure.
"The bank's road to recovery will likely be a challenging multi-year
journey. But the worse the situation gets for StanChart, we believe
the more likely it is that a white knight will eventually emerge,"
CLSA analysts Asheefa Sarangi and Lester Lim wrote in the note.
StanChart declined to comment, while DBS said in a statement there
was "no basis to the report, and it is not on our agenda". Singapore
state investor Temasek Holdings [TEM.UL], the biggest shareholder
for both StanChart and DBS, also declined to comment.
CLSA revised its forecasts for StanChart's earnings in 2015,
projecting a loss of $142 million for the year, a first for the bank
in at least 13 years.
The bank's shares dipped 0.5 percent in early London trading on
Friday after soaring 7.3 percent on Thursday, their biggest-one day
gain since March. StanChart's stock in Hong Kong closed 3.1 percent
higher, compared with a 0.5 percent decline in the benchmark Hang
Seng index. DBS lost 1.6 percent in Singapore.
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The slump in StanChart's shares this year has pushed its market
capitalization to $27 billion, an affordable level for several banks
with regional ambitions, the CLSA report added.
(Additional reporting by Saeed Azhar and Denny Thomas; Editing by
Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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